Conscience rights aren鈥檛 primarily about religion, but rather about the convictions of citizens and the obligation governments have to respect and protect citizens and their convictions, Dr. Nora Pope told members of the Standing Committee on Finance and Economic Affairs.
鈥淚 won鈥檛 refer for killing because I don鈥檛 believe in killing,鈥 Pope told legislators as she pleaded for an amendment to Bill 84 to protect the conscience rights of medical practitioners.
Pope鱿鱼视频app conscientious objection to medical aid in dying (MAID) is based on personal conviction and her 15 years of practice as a naturopathic doctor, not on religion.
鈥淭hese concepts of conscience rights are from the Enlightenment. They are secular concepts,鈥 Pope said. 鈥淢any atheists are not in favour of killing.鈥
Respect for freedom of conscience is 鈥渢he bedrock of civilized society,鈥 Pope argued.
She pointed out that some of the first jurisdictions to legalize doctor assisted suicide, Oregon and Belgium, protect doctors who refuse to offer the procedure or refer for medicalized suicide. It should worry legislators that Ontario is about to become the only jurisdiction in the world that forces doctors to refer for the procedure, Pope said.
鈥淚t will distort the fabric of society toward MAID,鈥 said Pope.
NDP health critic France G茅linas used the morning hearings to hammer the government over what she called an inadequate, rushed consultation process before bringing the new bill to the legislature. Both Quebec and Alberta found ways to institute legal, voluntary euthanasia without forcing doctors to refer, she said.
鈥淲e never created that safe space so we can have this conversation,鈥 G茅linas said.
Gelinas pointedly asked Markham-Stouffville staff respirologist Dr. Althea Burrell whether the government had consulted her about conscience rights before introducing Bill 84.
鈥淣o,鈥 Burrell said.
鈥淒o you think you should have (been consulted)?鈥 Gelinas asked.
鈥淵es,鈥 said Burrell.
Liberal MPP John Fraser defended the government鱿鱼视频app consultation process.
鈥淚 believe our consultation process was really robust,鈥 he said.
Fraser argued that the highly technical Bill 84, which adjusts provincial laws on insurance, coroners鈥 reports, Workers鈥 Compensation, pensions and other matters, is the wrong place to hash out a compromise on the conscience rights of doctors.
鈥淲e have to figure out a way to balance those two rights,鈥 he said.
Conservative health critic Jeff Yurek clashed with Fraser over whether Bill 84 was the right place to protect conscience rights for doctors.
鈥淭his is the right place to have this conversation,鈥 Yurek said.
Yurek plans to introduce an amendment to the bill. Amendments must be presented to the committee by April 7.
A Catholic doctor who works with many patients nearing the end of life, Burrell explained to MPPs why referral is such a big issue for objecting doctors.
鈥淭his means I am, quite apart from my wishes, instrumental in causing the death of my patient,鈥 she said.
Like Pope, Burrell pointed out how Ontario鱿鱼视频app duty-to-refer policies are at odds with the practice and policies in every other jurisdiction that has legalized medical assistance in dying.
鈥淲e are really an unfortunate outlier in this regard,鈥 she said.
In addition to arguing for her own rights as an individual doctor, Burrell pleaded for hospices, nursing homes and hospitals to be able to allowed to opt out.
鈥淚 would also want my care team to share my views on life,鈥 Burrell said.
Doctors who won鈥檛 refer for MAID are not abandoning their patients, Burrell said.
鈥淣othing could be further from the truth,鈥 she said.
Nor would she, as a doctor, stand in the way of a patient accessing MAID through a neutral, self-referral process for assessments.
Christian Medical and Dental Society executive director Deacon Larry Worthen spoke about doctors threatened with having their medical licences suspended by the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario.
鈥淭here鱿鱼视频app a problem when a regulator seeks to impose their beliefs on us,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t鱿鱼视频app wrong for the college to say, 鈥楲ook, it鱿鱼视频app not a problem for us, we don鈥檛 see why it鱿鱼视频app a problem for you?鈥
It鱿鱼视频app up to MPPs to solve the problem of equal access to MAID across the province, not the College of Physicians and Surgeons, Worthen said.
鈥淭he college doesn鈥檛 have the resources to create a care co-ordination system,鈥 said Worthen.
The current system, which depends on individual doctor referrals, 鈥渋s creating a bottleneck鈥 for patients who want assisted suicide, said Worthen.
An earlier version of the story identified Dr. Nora Pope as an atheist. She has since clarified with The Catholic Register that she is not an atheist.